CalPERS Takes Steps to Crack Down on Disability Fraud.SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- The CalPERS Benefit and Program Administration Committee voted today to recommend that the full Board on Wednesday sponsor legislation that would provide CalPERS greater authority to stop abuse and fraud in the System's disability retirement program. The intent for this legislation is to: --Improve the definition of fraud in the current law and establish civil and criminal penalties for committing such fraud, including restitution In the context of Criminal Law, state programs under which an offender is required, as a condition of his or her sentence, to repay money or donate services to the victim or society; with respect to maritime law, the restoration of articles lost by jettison, done when the ; --Provide CalPERS the authority to require a disabled member who has achieved the minimum age of retirement to undergo a medical exam to determine his or her current level of disability; and --Allow CalPERS investigators greater access to employment information from other state agencies. "This proposal will give us greater power to stop fraud in its tracks," said Kurato Shimada, Chair of the Benefits and Program Administration Committee. "It will allow us to ensure that our disability program is not being taken advantage of and give us more latitude latitude, angular distance of any point on the surface of the earth north or south of the equator. The equator is latitude 0°, and the North Pole and South Pole are latitudes 90°N and 90°S, respectively. to weed weed, common term for any wild plant, particularly an undesired plant, growing in cultivated ground, where it competes with crop plants for soil nutrients and water. out anyone who is receiving benefits fraudulently." The proposal also fulfills aspects of recommendation PS11 of the California Performance Review report regarding the disability retirement program. The review found that there is no statute which defines as fraud those activities associated with a member's fraudulent application for retirement, and no clear penalties for such fraud. Currently, CalPERS has a Disability Validation Team (DVT See deep vein thrombosis. ), that ensures the retirement system is making payments to qualified disabled members while simultaneously working to identify disability claims that are without merit. "We have been investigating potential fraudulent disability for more than 20 years, but the law has always hampered our ability to penalize pe·nal·ize tr.v. pe·nal·ized, pe·nal·iz·ing, pe·nal·iz·es 1. To subject to a penalty, especially for infringement of a law or official regulation. See Synonyms at punish. 2. those who deceive TO DECEIVE. To induce another either by words or actions, to take that for true which is not so. Wolff, Inst. Nat. Sec. 356. the system. This proposal will strengthen our ability to expose abusers," said Robert Walton, Assistant Executive Officer of Governmental, Administrative & Planning Services. CalPERS DVT is also working with the CHP CHP Chapter CHP Combined Heat and Power CHP California Highway Patrol CHP Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi (Turkish: Republican People's Party) CHP Chemical Hygiene Plan (OSHA) CHP Community Health Plan and the Department of Corrections Workers' Compensation workers' compensation, payment by employers for some part of the cost of injuries, or in some cases of occupational diseases, received by employees in the course of their work. Fraud Unit to jointly identify and work on possible fraudulent cases. CHP and Corrections have the highest cases of abuse since many of their employees are classified as safety members. In addition, the DVT is reviewing 21 cases identified by CHP's Audit Task Force. CalPERS is the nation's largest public pension fund, with assets totaling more than $177 billion. The System provides retirement and health benefits to 1.4 million State school, and local public employees and their families. For further information on CalPERS, visit www.calpers.ca.gov. |
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